macrumors regular

They differ in terms of memory management and flexibility. The second method, @"hello" , is a literal string - you don't need to retain or release it. It will always be around. Handy for creating constants. Even if you use this line in a loop, you are NOT creating a new object every time. There's only one @"hello" .

The first one - the alloc/init - creates a new NSString object for you, which you manage (retain/release) as appropriate. Also, the init method you chose, initWithFormat, can take a format string a list of variables - so if you need to combine a list of variables into a string, you can use:

You can't do that with the @ method - literal strings are defined when the program is compiled, not when it's running.

I'd use the @"Hello" wherever I have a string that will always be the same every time I run my program, and the longer form whenever I need to construct a string that will be different every time I run my program.

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